Iran General NewsDubai to curb reliance on Iranian condensate, ENOC’s CEO...

Dubai to curb reliance on Iranian condensate, ENOC’s CEO says

-

Bloomberg: Dubai’s state refining company, which buys most of its condensate from Iran, is seeking alternative sources of the fuel to curb imports from the Islamic republic and avoid running afoul of international sanctions. Bloomberg

By Anthony DiPaola

Dubai’s state refining company, which buys most of its condensate from Iran, is seeking alternative sources of the fuel to curb imports from the Islamic republic and avoid running afoul of international sanctions.

Iran is “still the major supplier,” Saeed Khoory, chief executive officer of Emirates National Oil Co., said today in an interview in Dubai. “We are trying to find other sources.”

ENOC, as the refiner is known, wants new suppliers of condensate because U.S. sanctions threaten financial penalties for companies that trade with Iran. ENOC said in February it had signed a contract with the Gulf sheikhdom of Qatar for a year’s supply of condensate. ENOC operates a 120,000 barrel-a-day condensate refinery that splits the light crude into oil products such as naphtha, reformate, jet fuel and diesel.

The company, based in the second-largest sheikhdom in the United Arab Emirates, was already buying some condensate from Qatar on the spot market. The term contract with Qatar will allow ENOC to buy more fuel than it can secure under spot purchases and guarantee more reliable supply, Khoory said. ENOC agreed to buy 20,000 barrels a day of Qatari condensate annually.

That would mean ENOC is still buying as much as 100,000 barrels a day from Iran. When asked about that figure, Khoory said: “It depends.” The company can buy less of the fuel from Iran once it lines up other suppliers, he said, without specifying whether ENOC was trying to cut purchases of Iranian condensate to zero.

“We are trying to reduce our supply from Iran,” Khoory said when asked whether ENOC would eliminate Iranian condensate imports. “You always have to diversify.”

ENOC said in February it had bought 20 percent less condensate from Iran in the second half of 2012 than in the first six months of that year.

The company’s only refinery, at the port of Jebel Ali in Dubai, is running at its full daily capacity after maintenance in December, Khoory said.

Latest news

The Effects of Sanctions Relief and Negotiations on Iran’s Economy

Today, Iran’s economy is simultaneously suffering from chronic inflation, declining investment, the erosion of the middle class, expanding poverty,...

Ali Khamenei’s Corpse and the Spectacle of a Dictator’s Burial

The project of burying Ali Khamenei has long been a subject of discussion among the leaders of Iran's regime....

Agreement Between Iran’s Regime and the United States Highlights a New Rift Within the Ruling Establishment

Disagreements over the course of negotiations between Tehran and Washington have once again become public. While some media outlets...

Renewed Protests Erupt in Iran

In recent days, Iran has witnessed fundamental changes in the nature of popular protests. The movement has evolved from...

Rising Crime and Social Breakdown After 47 Years of Clerical Rule in Iran

While Iran's regime has spent much of its resources and capabilities over more than four decades suppressing opponents, silencing...

Seventy-Eight Nobel Laureates Urge UN Action Amid Rising Executions in Iran

A coalition of 78 Nobel Prize laureates has issued a joint appeal to United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres, calling...

Must read

Iran fires back at Gulf states for damning remarks

Iran Focus: London, Nov. 29 – Iran angrily condemned...

US Calls on Iran and Russia to Prevent Syrian Chemical Weapons Attacks

Iran Focus London, 6 Apr - Following the deadly chemical...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you